Roasting is a method of torture used since ancient times. The Romans paralyzed the prisoners and placed hot iron plates on the soles of their feet. Spanish Inquisitions often use improved techniques, tying prisoners face-to-face onto shelves with bare feet secured in stock. The sole of the foot is smeared with lard or oil and is slowly burned on the embers of a fire. A screen can be inserted between the legs and the embers to modulate the exposure, while the bellows control the intensity of the flame. Some of the famous Templar Knights have literally been driven insane by the intensity and cruelty of torture. Variants include placing hot coals between the toes, or delaying the prisoner head down and placing hot coals directly on the sole of the foot. Foot massage remains a popular torture technique to this day, although modern variants typically use iron clothing that is applied to the soles, optionally equipped with the use of soldering iron or an electric firewood pencil to explore the fine webbing between the toes.
Video Foot roasting
Knights Templar
Toasting is one of the main tortures used to extract the supposed confession of heretics and other allegations made against the Templars after their capture in October 1307. It is recorded that one of the Templar's legs was brutally tortured - when he was taken back to his cell - various scrawny bone fragments fell from his feet to the floor. Inmates can also be bowed head-down from stock, with hot coals placed directly on the soles of the feet - held by gravity - while thin slices of embers are slid between a pair of adjacent toes.
Maps Foot roasting
Brittany
In Brittany, an enhanced interrogation chair is used that paralyzes the legs and provides a moveable coal tray that can rotate up and down, eventually making physical contact with the soles of the feet.
Star kick
A form of torture called "kicking stars" should begin with Countess Elizabeth Bathory, which will place scraps of oiled paper or thread between the prisoners' toes and light up the burning material.
References
Source of the article : Wikipedia